Articles: anesthesia.
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Multicenter Study
Expertise in practice: an ethnographic study exploring acquisition and use of knowledge in anaesthesia.
Expert professional practice in any field is known to rely on both explicit (formal) and tacit (personal) forms of knowledge. Current anaesthetic training programmes appear to favour explicit knowledge and measurable competencies. We aimed to describe and explore the way different types of knowledge are learned and used in anaesthetic practice. ⋯ Opportunities for developing expertise are linked to the independent development of personal routines. Evidence-based approaches to professional practice may obscure the role played by the interpretation of knowledge. We suggest that the restriction of apprenticeship-style training threatens the acquisition of anaesthetic expertise as defined in this paper.
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Multicenter Study
Allergy to local anesthetics in dentistry. Myth or reality?
Local anesthetics are drugs frequently used in dentistry. Although they are usually well-tolerated drugs, sometimes, they can cause adverse reactions of different kinds and severity. True incidence of local anesthetics' allergic reactions is unknown. ⋯ The allergic reactions to the local anesthetics are very rare and most of the adverse reactions are psychogenic/vasovagal. These facts should be known by the physician and by the dentist in order to minimize the frequent fears and "myths" about the use of local anesthetics at the dentist office.
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We reported anesthesia-related mortality and morbidity in Japanese Society of Anesthesiologists Certified Training Hospitals (JSACTH) in the year 2001, as a part of the second series of annual studies in the identical questionnaires form started in 1999. JSA Committee on Operating Room Safety sent confidential questionnaires to 813 JSACTH and received effective answers from 87.9% of the hospitals. A total number of 1,284,957 anesthetics were documented. ⋯ Three major causes of all critical incidents in 52 detailed classification of principal causes were preoperative hemorrhagic shock (31.4%), massive hemorrhage due to surgical procedures (16.9%), and preoperative multiple organ failure/sepsis (9.0%). In conclusion, the obtained incidences as to cardiac arrest and death, either in total number during anesthesia/surgery or in that due to anesthetic management, kept decreasing lineally through 8 years study in 1994-2001. We expect that this second series of annual studies for five-years should reveal precise and definite direction for us to reduce anesthesia-related mortality and morbidity by analyzing further detail with special reference to ASA physical status, age distribution, surgery sites and anesthetic methods.
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Journal of periodontology · May 2003
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Comparative Study Clinical TrialIntrapocket anesthesia for scaling and root planing in pain-sensitive patients.
In 2 previous multicenter studies evaluating the efficacy of a novel anesthetic gel (lidocaine 25 mg/g plus prilocaine 25 mg/g), there was a rather small, although statistically significant, overall difference between the active and placebo gels. There were, however, large center variations. At centers where the placebo-treated patients reported high pain scores, the difference between treatments was large, suggesting that the anesthetic gel is most effective in patients who experience the procedure as painful. The present multicenter, double-blind, randomized study evaluated the anesthetic effect of this gel in pain-sensitive patients by using a visual analog scale (VAS) and a verbal rating scale (VRS). ⋯ This study confirms the favorable anesthetic efficacy of active gel over placebo in selected pain-sensitive patients. It suggests that the gel may be a valuable alternative to conventional injection anesthesia.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Mar 2003
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Comparative Study Clinical TrialDoes anaesthesia cause postoperative cognitive dysfunction? A randomised study of regional versus general anaesthesia in 438 elderly patients.
Postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) is a common complication after cardiac and major non-cardiac surgery with general anaesthesia in the elderly. We hypothesized that the incidence of POCD would be less with regional anaesthesia rather than general. ⋯ No significant difference was found in the incidence of cognitive dysfunction 3 months after either general or regional anaesthesia in elderly patients. Thus, there seems to be no causative relationship between general anaesthesia and long-term POCD. Regional anaesthesia may decrease mortality and the incidence of POCD early after surgery.